It should be measured by feet if it is in cubic form.
It depends on the shape of the tanker.
I assume you meant measuring the level in an oil tanker making a delivery to a petrol station? The driver uses long metal rods that are dipped through opened caps on the top of the tanker to check the level inside. Note: I assume the metal rods are non-ferous and won't cause a spark, but I'm not sure!
We can't calculate that with the information given. We could calculate it if we had either one of the following: -- how deep the liquid was in the pot when it was full or -- the shape and dimensions of the bottom 15 inches of the pot
It would need the appropriate hazmat sign (I don't remember offhand was class sulphuric acid would be), plus the number code to indicate exactly what the load is.
Well- there is a problem. There was no such rifle in the US military as a "tanker" Garand. There were several versions developed for testing, but there were problems and they were not put into production. There have been several companies making what they CALLED a Tanker Garand, but there is no standard design. They vary between 6 and 8 inches shorter than the original M1 Garand.
Hazmat haulers do. A food grade tanker, dry bulk tanker, water tanker, etc. would not.
Normally a Tanker carries some liquid, mostly Oil, therefore the term "Oil Tanker".
Yes you do
A super-tanker is a big tank.
Vandal - tanker - ended in 1913.
British Tanker Company was created in 1915.
How much does a gas tanker truck cost?"